
Depiction of a Terra Amata hut as postulated by M. de Lumley. (see text)
'Terra Amata' is an
archaeological site near the
French town of
Nice.
Terra Amata was an open site with finds of
Acheulean flint tools dating it to the
Lower Paleolithic. It was excavated by a team of archaeologists led by
Henri de Lumley, who believed the site contained a series of superimposed living floors and who interpreted arrangements of stones at the site as the foundations of huts or windbreaks. This interpretation would make them some of the earliest examples of human habitation ever found.
However, as with other sites of possible human shelters, such as
Grotte du Lazaret, the evidence is more conjectural than compelling. It is equally likely that that the stones were naturally deposited through stream flow, soil creep or some other natural process. Moreover,
Paola Villa has demonstrated that stone artefacts from the different proposed living floors can be fitted together, showing that artefacts have moved up and down through the sediment column. Thus, the supposed living floor assemblages are most likely mixtures of artefacts from different time periods that have come to rest at particular levels. There is therefore compelling evidence that the site was subjected to relatively invasive
post-depositional processes, which may also be responsible for the stone 'arrangements'.
Notes
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The Human Past: World Prehistory & the Development of Human Societies, , Chris (ed.), Scarre, Thames & Hudson, 2005, ISBN 0-500-28531-4
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Terra Amata and the Middle Pleistocene archaeological record of southern France, , Paola, Villa, University of California Press, 1983, ISBN 0-520-09662-2
External links
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The Terra Amata Museum
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Guide to Museums in Nice